The Blog of International Judicial Assistance | By Ted Folkman of Murphy & King

Case of the Day: In re Application of Pinchuk

Posted on October 14, 2013

The case of the day is In re Application of Pinchuk (S.D. Fla. 2013). Victor Mikhaylovich Pinchuk was the claimant in an LCIA arbitration against Igor Valeryevich Kolomoisky and Gennadiy Borisovich Bogolyubov. The three had been joint venturers in the ferroalloy business. Pinchuk sought to take discovery under 28 U.S.C. § 1782 from several third parties supposedly controlled by Kolomoisky and Bogolyubov, namely Georgian American Alloys, Inc., Felman Production, Felman Trading, and Mordechai Korf. The judge granted the motion in a short decision.

There are only two points of interest in the decision. First, the judge followed what I think is the majority rule and held that the private arbitral tribunal was a tribunal within the scope of the statute. Readers should refer to S.I. Strong’s paper on this issue. Second, the judge considered the statutory prerequisites for application of § 1782 but not the discretionary Intel factors. I think courts should always consider the discretionary factors, or at least indicate that they are aware that they exist. As a practical matter, courts sometimes defer consideration of the Intel factors until the target of the discovery comes into the case; but at the ex parte application stage of a § 1782 case, I think it would still be better at least to refer to the Intel factors.

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